During the last twenty years Anglo-Saxon scholars have sought to discover in the Anglo-Saxon verse corpus something comparable to the FORMULAS in Homer as described by Parry [see Note 1]. In Homer formulas are recognised as expressions which are characteristically of no less than four words or five syllables, repeated in the corpus, and often used uniquely when the same needs of meaning, grammar and metre arise. In the Anglo-Saxon verse corpus repetitions as close as Homer's are rarer in occurrence and shorter in scope. The current view is that formulas as found in Homer are not matched by anything fully comparable in the Anglo-Saxon verse corpus.</p
Introduction. This article is devoted to the study of imitative (onomatopoeic and mimetic) lexicon o...
The conventional hypothesis of Old English poetic composition assumed that poets used a limited numb...
This thesis addresses the general issue of formulaic variation in early Greek epic – not formulaic c...
During the last twenty years Anglo-Saxon scholars have sought to discover in the Anglo-Saxon verse c...
One of the most striking features of Anglo-Saxon alliterative poetry is the extraordinary richness o...
In Beowulf, there are 106 verses in which second compound elements are unambiguously distributed int...
One of the most striking features of Anglo-Saxon alliterative poetry is the extraordinary richness o...
Michael Fox, Following the Formula in Beowulf, Örvar-Odds saga, and Tolkien, Palgrave Macmillan, 202...
Received wisdom has it that the Beowulf poet put together his poem halfline by halfline ("verse" by ...
Over the last forty-seven years commentators have explicated much of the structure of Beowulf by inv...
"The argument of the following article, though necessarily long and demanding, can be summarized bri...
Since the work of Milman Parry, the analysis of Homeric language has devoted considerable effort to ...
"In lines 607-61 of Beowulf, just before the battle between the hero and the monster Grendel, the Da...
Because of its faulty alliteration and irregular metrical configuration, the manuscript reading fela...
The paper deals with the linguistic and poetic analysis of the formula 'X maþelode' ('someone said')...
Introduction. This article is devoted to the study of imitative (onomatopoeic and mimetic) lexicon o...
The conventional hypothesis of Old English poetic composition assumed that poets used a limited numb...
This thesis addresses the general issue of formulaic variation in early Greek epic – not formulaic c...
During the last twenty years Anglo-Saxon scholars have sought to discover in the Anglo-Saxon verse c...
One of the most striking features of Anglo-Saxon alliterative poetry is the extraordinary richness o...
In Beowulf, there are 106 verses in which second compound elements are unambiguously distributed int...
One of the most striking features of Anglo-Saxon alliterative poetry is the extraordinary richness o...
Michael Fox, Following the Formula in Beowulf, Örvar-Odds saga, and Tolkien, Palgrave Macmillan, 202...
Received wisdom has it that the Beowulf poet put together his poem halfline by halfline ("verse" by ...
Over the last forty-seven years commentators have explicated much of the structure of Beowulf by inv...
"The argument of the following article, though necessarily long and demanding, can be summarized bri...
Since the work of Milman Parry, the analysis of Homeric language has devoted considerable effort to ...
"In lines 607-61 of Beowulf, just before the battle between the hero and the monster Grendel, the Da...
Because of its faulty alliteration and irregular metrical configuration, the manuscript reading fela...
The paper deals with the linguistic and poetic analysis of the formula 'X maþelode' ('someone said')...
Introduction. This article is devoted to the study of imitative (onomatopoeic and mimetic) lexicon o...
The conventional hypothesis of Old English poetic composition assumed that poets used a limited numb...
This thesis addresses the general issue of formulaic variation in early Greek epic – not formulaic c...